Texas
Analysis: Every so often, Texas government needs a reboot
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One parable about problem-solving is about tips on how to load rocks right into a truck, or a giant field. Begin with the boulders, then the stones, then the pebbles. Get the order mistaken, and the container will get full earlier than the rocks are all in. Get the order proper, and the pebbles fill in areas across the stones, and the stones fill in areas across the boulders.
Do the large stuff first. The little stuff, final.
What if authorities labored like that? It occurs from time to time, simply as a reminder of the facility of collective group motion — the fundamental thought behind authorities — and of what’s doable.
However it doesn’t occur typically sufficient within the regular course of presidency enterprise. It occurs when the traditional course of enterprise is interrupted, both by occasions or on objective.
Texas has a 30-year-old instance to think about. Comptroller Bob Bullock, working for lieutenant governor, proposed a “efficiency overview” of state authorities, and his successor, John Sharp, really put it collectively and made it a full-time operation in his company. Sharp additionally made a public attraction for presidency that “works higher and prices much less,” a option to contain voters and lift the stakes for lawmakers who is likely to be reluctant to go alongside.
The concept was easy: Rethink the whole lot the state is doing, attempt to make it extra environment friendly, weed out issues that don’t work, suggest new concepts, get monetary savings the place doable and remake all of it into one thing higher. The primary overview included suggestions to consolidate state companies and privatize some state companies, amongst different issues. Sharp, who’s now the chancellor of the Texas A&M College System, stated adopting all of it will free greater than $8 billion for financial savings or different state packages. The Legislature didn’t like all the concepts however went together with lots of it.
Political work is about imaginative and prescient, about setting targets, about successful public assist so you can also make legal guidelines with these targets in thoughts. The efficiency evaluations had been extra about how issues work, partly to release cash and different assets that may very well be used for different authorities and companies, partly simply to make issues work higher.
It’s an train in separating the operation of presidency — how issues work — from the route of presidency — what, in broader phrases, authorities ought to do. The nuts and bolts on one hand, the imaginative and prescient factor on the opposite.
Massive organizations want a kick within the pants from time to time. Spring cleansing. Reconsideration. An excellent, laborious questioning about what’s working, what’s not, whether or not the targets now are what they was. A shakeup.
“I believe it’s at all times a good suggestion to overview the effectivity and value effectiveness of state packages,” says Billy Hamilton, the deputy chancellor and chief monetary officer of the Texas A&M College System. He was Sharp’s deputy comptroller in 1991, and managed the primary and subsequent evaluations.
“The efficiency overview made state authorities higher. It launched new concepts and approaches. It shook issues up and have become a nationwide mannequin. Over time, packages construct up ‘plaque.’ There’s at all times a have to take away the buildup — or no less than ask laborious questions.”
They saved some cash, releasing up billions that had been tangled in varied packages to be used in different components of the state finances — a crucial promoting level on the time, as a result of state funds had been pinched and the Legislature was attempting to put in writing a finances that didn’t reduce packages pricey to voters.
There was lots of squirming within the government department of presidency — that’s the place a lot of the state’s packages and companies are — however it was helpful sufficient that the federal authorities and different state governments copied it. California even borrowed Hamilton to assist run its effort.
It progressively performed out, because the choices grew to become much less and fewer daring. You may make a splash with the primary set of suggestions, however every subsequent effort is somewhat weaker than its predecessor. And offers made to move varied concepts additionally get in the best way: An thought shelved in commerce for one thing else — quit this concept and we’ll approve that one — can’t be introduced again two years later. A deal is a deal.
When Sharp moved on, the following comptroller, Carole Keeton Rylander, picked up the efficiency evaluations. However she was thought-about — correctly — as a political competitor to then-Gov. Rick Perry, and lawmakers had grown weary of the biennial flood of proposals from the comptroller’s workplace.
The Legislature took them away, placing efficiency evaluations within the fingers of the Legislative Finances Board, the place they’ve light into an all-but-forgotten train largely ignored by lawmakers.
The state’s efficiency stories have been successfully buried, however there are many locations the place state authorities operations may use a scrubbing. That may release some cash. It’d simply make issues work higher, do away with some underperforming packages and add some issues policymakers want to do.
It’s a option to get away from the small rocks — the noisy little concepts of most political campaigns — and on to the large stuff each Texan is aware of about and hopes will probably be addressed by the elected of us in Austin: good faculties, good roads, a powerful security web, honest taxes and all the remaining. The boulders.
Editor’s observe: Ross Ramsey labored within the workplace of the Texas comptroller from 1996-98.
Disclosure: The Texas A&M College System and the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts have been monetary supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan information group that’s funded partially by donations from members, foundations and company sponsors. Monetary supporters play no position within the Tribune’s journalism. Discover a full checklist of them right here.
Texas
Texas AG sues Dallas for decriminalizing marijuana
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced a lawsuit Thursday targeting the blue city of Dallas over a ballot measure that decriminalizes marijuana.
Paxton alleges that Proposition R, which “prohibits the Dallas Police Department from making arrests or issuing citations for marijuana possession or considering the odor of marijuana as probable cause for search or seizure,” violates state law.
The attorney general argues in the lawsuit that the ballot measure is preempted by Texas law, which criminalizes the possession and distribution of marijuana. Paxton also claims the Texas Constitution prohibits municipalities from adopting an ordinance that conflicts with laws enacted by the state legislature.
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“Cities cannot pick and choose which State laws they follow,” Paxton said in a statement. “The City of Dallas has no authority to override Texas drug laws or prohibit the police from enforcing them.”
Paxton called the ballot measure “a backdoor attempt to violate the Texas Constitution” and threatened to sue any other city that “tries to constrain police in this fashion.”
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The lawsuit comes after interim Dallas Police Department Chief Michael Igo directed Dallas police officers not to enforce marijuana laws against those found to be in possession of less than 4 ounces.
Ground Game Texas, a progressive nonprofit group that campaigned in favor of the ballot measure, argued it would help “keep people out of jail for marijuana possession,” “reduce racially biased policing” and “save millions in public funding.”
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“It’s unfortunate but not surprising that Attorney General Ken Paxton has apparently chosen to waste everyone’s time and money by filing yet another baseless lawsuit against marijuana decriminalization,” said Catina Voellinger, executive director for Ground Game Texas.
“Judges in Travis and Hays counties have already dismissed identical lawsuits filed there. The Dallas Freedom Act was overwhelmingly approved by 67% of voters — this is democracy in action.”
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Since January 2024, Paxton has filed lawsuits against five Texas cities that decriminalized marijuana possession, arguing these policies promote crime, drug abuse and violence.
Texas
Tre Johnson, Texas Longhorns Scrape Past Saint Joseph’s to Win Legends Classic
The Texas Longhorns are heading back to Austin with some early-season tournament hardware in hand.
Tre Johnson battled through another poor shooting night but closed the game out for Texas once again, scoring a game-high 17 points to lead the Longhorns to a 67-58 win over Saint Joseph’s at the Legends Classic championship round in Brooklyn Friday night.
Transfer guard Julian Larry sparked the Longhorns late, scoring all 12 of his points in the second half. Arthur Kaluma added 14 points, four rebounds and four assists while Kadin Shedrick had 10 points and six rebounds.
The Hawks were led by Rasheer Fleming, who stuffed the stat sheet with 16 points, 20 rebounds, three assists, two blocks and three steals. Xzayvier Brown added 15 points on 4 of 7 shooting.
The Longhorns jumped out to an 11-6 lead after seven early points from Kaluma. St. Joe’s started out cold from the field but controlled the game with hard-nosed defense and the occasional press while dominating the offensive glass. This was highlighted by a possession where the Hawks got four consecutive offensive rebounds but only scored one point as a result.
Johnson stayed aggressive on offense for Texas but was off on his shot and was impacted by the on-ball defense of St. Joe’s.
Mark, Pope and Johnson all hit a triple for Texas in about a two-minute span ahead of halftime to give the Longhorns their biggest lead at 32-26 but the Hawks responded with a free throw from Haskins 3-pointer from Brown before halftime to cut the lead to 32-30.
The defense from the Hawks ramped up even more, as the Longhorns were stuck in the mud on offense and had little to no ball movement. St. Joe’s was hardly much better, but its defense continued to set the tone and eventually swung the momentum.
Larry then hit back-to-back triples as the two teams traded buckets on five straight possessions. Consecutive dunks from Ajogbor and Fleming but the Hawks in front 50-46 with 8:25 to play, but Larry continued to take over. He hit 1,000 career points with a driving layup before finding Kaluma for a corner triple to put Texas back in front at 51-50.
It didn’t stop there for Larry, who found a cutting Shedrick for a dunk before diving on a loose ball down at the other end to secure possession for Texas, which had built a 55-52 lead with 3:13 left. The Longhorns used the momentum to put together an 8-0 run, which essentially sealed the win in a game where scoring felt hard to come by.
Johnson then closed the game out with six points in the final 4:11 of action, including a pullup jumper at the foul line to put Texas up 63-55 with 1:19 left.
Texas will host Delaware State on Nov. 29.
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Texas
UT System’s free tuition plan sparks resistance from some Texas lawmakers
WASHINGTON — State Rep. Brian Harrison, R-Midlothian, said Friday he plans to meet with top University of Texas System officials after they announced a plan to provide free tuition and waived fees to students whose families make $100,000 or less.
While many elected officials have praised the initiative, Harrison criticized it as an “abuse of power” that makes Texas higher education “more socialist than California.”
Harrison said Friday he’s unswayed by statements from the system and supporters who say the move will be funded from university endowments, not taxpayers.
Harrison compared such statements to someone saying they’re removing water from the shallow side of a pool, not the deep end. It’s all the same water.
“Money is fungible, so that doesn’t satisfy me in the slightest,” Harrison said.
The new initiative is an expansion of the Promise Plus Program, a needs-based financial aid initiative, and comes amid widespread concerns about the impact of inflation and college costs on families. Gov. Greg Abbott recently prohibited Texas colleges and universities from raising tuition for the next two years.
UT System Chancellor James B. Milliken hailed the expansion as a “game changer” that will make “enormous, real difference” to improve college access for all Texans.
Not everyone is a fan.
Harrison and like-minded House colleagues have compared it to President Joe Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan that drew intense blowback from conservatives and was largely struck down by the courts. They also said such a consequential change in policy should come from the elected lawmakers serving in the Legislature.
“There must be consequences,” Harrison said on X. “UT’s budget must be cut, and bureaucrats should be fired.”
He led 10 Republican lawmakers, most of them incoming freshmen, in a letter to the regents demanding answers to a litany of questions, including the price tag of the expansion and the source of that money.
“What specific statutory authority did the regents rely on to make a decision this consequential, which will have direct financial consequences for our constituents, many of whom are already struggling to put gas in their tanks and food on their tables?” the lawmakers wrote.
UT System spokesman Paul Corliss has said the program is not funded through taxes or any kind of public subsidy.
“Rather it is funded through existing UT System endowments,” Corliss said.
Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, hammered that point in a response to Harrison on social media.
“There are no tax dollars involved,” Howard said on X. “Higher Ed institutions are already helping families afford college. This expands philanthropic endowments and helps meet affordability goals of [Abbott and the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board].”
Harrison and his colleagues will have to contend with many members of the public embracing a plan that already is encouraging young people to adjust their higher education aspirations.
Frank Whitefeather, a high school senior, stayed up until 2:30 a.m. Friday working on his college application essay.
He was freshly motivated after the announcement that students whose families make less than $100,000 annually will get free tuition and waived fees at the University of Texas at Austin and other schools in the UT System.
“I wouldn’t be in debt,” said Whitefeather, 17. “I wouldn’t have to have student loans.”
Whitefeather, who attends Dallas ISD’s Sunset High School, thinks the UT news also could change many of his peers’ lives. It’s already changing his plans. Whitefeather hopes to study engineering and be his own boss one day. Texas A&M and UT Austin were his top two choices, but the free tuition announcement has pushed UT ahead.
Harrison said the university system is being contradictory by simultaneously saying it has enough money to offer tuition-free education, but also that a tuition freeze could leave it cash strapped and require more funding from the Legislature.
“I guarantee you they’re going to be requesting more tax money from the Legislature next session,” he said.
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